September 29, 2024 (KHARTOUM) – The Rapid Support Forces (RSF) said on Sunday it would no longer negotiate with the Sudanese army and would seek a military solution to the conflict, a spokesperson for the paramilitary group said. The announcement followed an army offensive launched on Wednesday that saw them advance into the Kadaru and Halfaya districts north of Khartoum Bahri. Heavy fighting was also reported in the Al-Muqrin area of central Khartoum. “We wanted peace, but since they wanted war, we are ready for it, and there will be no negotiations after today because we will be on the battlefield,” spokesperson of the RSF negotiating team Mohamed Al-Mukhtar Al-Nur said in a video statement. He accused the army of launching a relentless war and said the RSF would pursue them “even to Port Sudan.” The army has demanded that the RSF withdraw from areas under their control, assemble their troops in designated locations, and disarm before any negotiations can take place. They accuse the RSF of violating the Jeddah Declaration signed on May 11, 2023. The army also rejected a U.S. invitation to participate in negotiations with the RSF in Switzerland on August 15, with Saudi Arabia as a co-host. Al-Nur dismissed the army and its allies’ mobilization efforts as “failed attempts” and urged RSF fighters to be decisive. “Now the drums of war have been beaten… We know how to fight the army,” he said. The Sudan Liberation Movement, led by Minni Arko Minawi, and the Justice and Equality Movement, led by Gibril Ibrahim, are fighting alongside the army against the RSF in El Fasher, the capital of North Darfur State. They are also present in the city of Omdurman, River Nile State in northern Sudan, and Al Qadarif State in the east of the country.
Post By Diaspoint | September 30, 2024
Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi called on the international community to sanction Rwanda for its role in “destabilizing” his country Wednesday as he addressed the United Nations General Assembly in New York.
“The resurgence of terrorist group M23, supported by Rwanda, has provoked a humanitarian crisis without precedent,” Tshisekedi said, adding more than 7 million people in the DRC had been internally displaced by the fighting.
UN experts have said previously that between 3,000 and 4,000 Rwandan troops are in Congo operating with the M23 rebel group, which has been in conflict with Congolese troops for a decade.
Tshisekedi called on the UN to “intensify its actions to implement the recommendations” of the global coalition against the Islamic State, of which DRC is a member, and deplored the fact that terrorism “now seems to be taking root in Africa.”
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